OCR Text |
Show PAGE TWO DAILY UTAH STATE JOURNAL. WEDNESDAY, JULY 3, 1907. Hlalj jytatr Journal OGDEN. UTAH. Jtaraal f ebiukiaf Cwcjaay. Publishers. (Incorporated.) Publlsned every evening except Sunday Telephones. Business Office Editorial Rooms ....Bell, 114 lnd., CCS ....Bell, lnd, CSC CSC 1 1 2 2 This Week at SYLVAN PARK ring ring rings rings Change Every Week Hursts Auto Chr TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. IS.OC By Mall One Tear S.CO By Mall Six Mon tlis 1.50 By Mail Three Months 10 By MaiT One Month SO By Carrier One Month Pay No Money To Carriers. MIV!G VS. IMP0RTAT, IF TRUE. FABMIVG. Bark City, 2(1 Main. 224 Main. Salt A most pussling problem Is confrontmatter at In an article in which a compariaon VI ah, under is the value of the pro- ing the statesmen of the old world, made Act o t Congress of March A 1070. duct of the mines and the product of and It la aa delicate to handle aa It Is to Genl. Manager the farms, the Journal of Finance of appruacli. because It has to deal with B. A BOWMAN thia country alone, says the San Frant'liiciiKu sura: NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS. More than $8,000,-000,0- WITH The Wall street bears, who lay ex- cisco News-Lette- r. Entered no second-clathe postoffice at Ogden. nt rei-eive- General Manager. OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE COUNTY THE ROAD TO YESTERDAY. Down the long, broad road as It leads away s scenes of n yester- To the ltleaaaiit iniiie-iiiaker- day To the orchard wide where the laden trees Bwlng to and fro In the balmy breese; with Its creakBy the old ing pole And the big white rock by the swimming hole Ah, the acent that coince from the new -- mown hay, Whuse lung drifts lay Where the sunbeams play On the long wide road to yesterday! well-ewe- ep The milestones stund with their tinge uf gray As the mind harks back to a yester- day, And the road grows smooth as the eyes behold scenes of tht days of The long-lo- st old Paces bright of tha old school crowd Long since wrapped In the aheet and shroud; Welcome shouts from the chums so gay Who rump and play In the old-tliway By tlie long, wide road to yesterday! The evening lump through the window ahitioa, And we once more aea the stumbling Unea Of the old text-hook- s, and each pua-sli- ng rule That caused ua grief In the houra of school. And a sweet old face 'gainst the win dnwiwna Looks down the reach of the shady lane; And the welcome gleams In her bright eyes play Aa on we alray Through the evening gray Down the old, old road to yeaterday! Down the long, wide road as it leads away To the scenes of that yesterday. When the heart was light aa the thistle's down. And we little knew of the hard world's frown; Where the friends we knew were the girls and boys To divide our woes and to share our old-ti- Joys Where life was aweet and the hours were gay With love and play In our childhood way At the end of the road to yesterday! Three Splendid Toilet Soaps It Is almost Impossible to find three more delightful toilet soaps to use. They are pure soups; they are fragrantly perfumed: they leave the skin In a soft, pure, clean and perfumed condition. Yutopia Narcissus Le Beau Monde Just one trial will convince you that you never used a more delightful soap. Just as good and pure as the more expensive kind, more fragrant, more lasting; more satisfactory. ONE CAKE 10c BOX OF I CAKES.... 2Sc I PRESCRIPTION Wash. Av. 2479 SPECIALISTS Ogt'en, Utah traordinary stress on unfavorable crop conditions In the United States, and who insist that shortage in our staple crops must necessarily prove a decided check to our prosperity, overlook some highly important elements In our business situation that may more than offset losses due to short crops. There are other Individuals, be aides farmers, who are factors In making tins United States b nation of ever Increasing prosperity. We have especially in mind lu this respect the ledge-Ande- rs uf the counand mine-make- rs try, wlio make the earth give up, for the benefit of mankind, Its hidden resources of useful and precious metals. For instance, tlie shortage in the winter w heat crop, as eailmaled by the United States deiwrtinent of agricul ture, will doubtless not represent In dollars and cents any greater amount if niui icy titan will probably be thla countrys guln for the year 1907 though the of the ledge enterprising s. Aa noted in Anders and lust week's Journal uf Finance, the director of the mint, George E. ltob erls, estimates that the 'production of gold lu the United States fur 1007, owing largely to the great Increase In the Nevada output, will amount thla year to over $100,000,000. This alone la coiuiietisutloit, linaiiclally speaking, fur a sliortagle of 100.000,000 bushels of wittier wheat at $1 a bushel, nor must It be overlooked that wheat could not sell at $1 a bushel, but more likely at SO cents or under, were there not this big shortage In the crop. lu a corrcsHndlng way the bad luck of the cotton planters may thia year be oft set by the good luck of the copper miners, for Increased production and higher prices for popper In 1907 may be more than an equivalent for loaa through shortage in cotton production. Tlie value of cupiier exporta from tha United Klatea la Increasing marvelously. Prior to 1898 exporta of cotton had not even attained the $1,000,000 mark, and from that time until 1901 the ex port ranged In valuo between $1,000,' 000 and $5,000,000. In 1892 they gained to $7,250,000; In 1804 to $19,500,000; In 1897 to $31,500,000; In 1809 to $86,000, 000; In 1900 to $57,750,000, and last year to $81,000,000. The Increased use of electricity throughout the world has been the main factor in the phenoin enal gains In tlie copcr export trade. Another huge source of wealth to the United States la the steel industry, which, during the last nine months, has made a credit Item on our aide of tlie International credit balance of about $132,000,000. It Is Interesting to observe from the April statement of the bureau of statistic at Washington that the total value uf all our exporta in April increased $11,118,259, nearly all of which increase was due to export of metal and goods manufactured chiefly from metals. The wealth that the United States gulns as a result of tlie enterprise and labors of Its ledge-flnde- rs and mine' makers Is of a more enduring and re' producing sort than what It gains from large cruia. Commodities like wheat and cotton must be consumed within a reasonable time or they will deteriorate and become unflt for use. The people of the country can eat just so much bread from Aour and wear just so many articles of dress from cotton, and the more tliey eat and the more they wear, the richer they ntay temporarily think themselves. But with the useful and precious metals it Is different, as whatever Is taken from the ground la a kind of wealth that la not only alinoat imperishable, but which can result In production of other aorta of wealth for years to come. The use of gold as a basis for money and for credits generally; the use of steel fur railroads and other Important industrial purposes; the use of copper for transmitting electrical energy and for many other objects are all such as to continually promote and provide for accumulation of national wealth. The shortage in the wheat and cotton crops for this year may Ave years from now be almost a forgotten fact, while the gold, steel and copper produced this year may Ave years from now have yielded perhaps more than a hundred fold returns by their constant use in the business and Industry wealth-produci- ng of the country. foreign capital la Invested in Industrial railway and other and nearly all of it a held So many strikes Investors. and other kinds of labor troubles, with apparently no power or no disposition on the iiart of the authorities to protect property rights, are creating very much doubt In the minds of the investors as to the stability of their securities. Of course, these people care little or nothing about us or our institutions, but they do care a great deal about their g money and their governments to be (Ailed upon to demand of America some security against the destroying luAuence upon the value uf the properties lu which they have Inarwex-pectln- vested. Already there Is a strong feeling among Kuroitean Investors in American securities that because of tyranulcal and pruperty-destroy!i- ig methods of labor unions, and their continual demands for shorter hours of labor and higher wages, securities will depreciate and Anally be aa difficult to collect as Is now the case In the states. But how tlie statesmen are to open up discussion on the question of tlie government preventing labor attacks on property values la a delicate qucutluii to approach, but European diplomatists do not hesitate to say that lubor unionism In the United 8 tales is bound to become a diplomatic question unless better protection to foreign investments is secured in the near fuLatin-Americ- an ture. Eastern Utah Advocate: The offi cers should stop the use of foul language arid the commission uf other nuisances In the streets and public places. These offenses are getting to be altogether too frequent, and an object lesson should be made of aoine uf the degenerates who are In the habit uf using foul and Indecent language, especially In public places. The loud, promiscuous use of bad language la esiieclally a nuisance that must be abated. The offenders are usually mart alecka who, Inebriated by one or two glasses of beer. Imagine that It la necessary to swear. They go to the saloon from door to dour, wildly gesticulating with hat and hands, using words that would shock the devil and pollute the scavenger department uf hell. If these fellows would stop to think, they would realise that some' one's mother, wife or slater la usually shocked by their dirty words. But they haven't brain enough to think. They haven't brains enough to pan even one color of gray matter. They should be taught, however, that it la aster and better for them to try some other way of being considered and "smart manly." LT IT SHE WILL FIND OUT WHY THE KID DONT KNOW. 00 of American securities, by small If Ho Spoils Cat with a Little "k" She'll Pounce Onto Him, Btrap Himto a Saw Horso and Turn the Thing Loose on Him and Sea Why Ho Did It NEW TORK, July 1. The school authorities of New York have had their attention called to an Invention called the ergugraph, which la warranted to determine the real cause fur a pupils backwardness In his studies. When the dunce of the class casually remarks that two and two make Ave, the teacher need no longer thruw the blackboard at him. Instead he can test him by the ergugraph and And whether overstudy or tou much play la the cause of the disaster. The new Instrument Is a German Invention and is said to hare been tried successfully in the London schools. The glowing reports of Its success may lead to Its adoption for the schools of New York and other American cities. According to the description the forearm of the child ia clamped to the table that holds the apparatus Then the hmid is secured, only the middle Anger bring left free. Thla isolated Anger Is placed In a little ateel box, and the pupil Aexea the muaclea aa long aa he can, setting wheels and springs at workv with the reault that a suspended weight lifts with each effort. There ia an Indicator at the back of It, whose marks ascend from 5 to $00. The child that succeeds in pressing the indicator to the highest point Invariably turns out to be the bright boy of the class. If Johnny arrives in the morning feeling so At that he can push the Indicator up to 100, and In the evening can get It only half aa far, the Inference la that Johnny needa less study and more fresh air, or, perhaps, better horror-s- Bill Changes Every Saturday Matinee. EYfENINGS Two Performances, 7:30 and 9:15. MATINEE Daily (Except Sunday) at 3:30. Prices 10, 20, 30c 10, 20c Matinees A food and more of It It la said that ergograph does not confine Its revelations to children. It Is equally efficient In dealing with adults. One of lta virtues la that It will show whether the subject is laxy or la really Incapable of much physical endurance. The two states are often confounded in schools. The teacher baa only to ask the ergograph to answer and It will decide with Illuminat- Modern Necessity Is the telephone to Of course you want the best. Call 51 for information. THE PHONE THAT TALK5" ing Impartiality. Utah Independent Telephone Compy POLITICS AND POLITICIANS. Charles C. Carlin has been nominated by the Democrats as representative to congress from the Eighth district of Virginia to All the vacancy caused by the death of John F. Rixey. Mr. Carlin started In life aa a newsboy, later waa a telegrapher, and then took up the study and practice of law. YOU WORK HARD FOR YOUR MONEY but, when you get It, how much attention do you give to the cere of It? It la the proper care of your Income that counts for future prosperity. Do you realise how nicely a checking account will systematise your financial affairs? How much less trouble It Is to have a check account than to keep books? What la It worth to you to be able to look over your expense account and know just where your money goes? Do you know how toon you have to pay an account the second tlma because you failed tomay get a receipt? No trouble about these things when you use checks; start an account with us; you will And It a convenience aa well as really self-educat- ed j helpful. THE OGDEN STATE BANK OP OGDEN, UTAH H-- C. BIGELOW, President. J. M. BROWNING, Vice Pres. The UTAH NATIONAL BANK UNITED I Or Hay, Grain, Poultry Supplies, Fleur and Seeds. 352 24TH STREET. DR. EtSTEtS, SPECIALIST j Free Examination and Consultation for any Chron Disease of any Name or Nature Profile of Britaln'o Cotton Trade. The capital represented by Great Britain' cotton trade la $2,000.000, 00C a year, and the profits $350,000,000 a year. all druggists. ! I OGDEN STATES DEPOSITARY Accounts and Time Deposits j Chas. F. Grout I RALPH E. HOAO, Cashier. A. V. McINTOSH, Asst. Cashier. J B. DOOLY. President. JOSEPH S. PEERY, Vice-Pr- ea j DO IT NOW. Now la the time to get rid of your rheumatism. Tou can do so by apply- -' Ing Chamberlains Pain Balm. Nine ' cases out of ten are simply muscular' rheumatism due to cold or chronic rheumatism, and yield to the vigorous application of this liniment Try It' Tou are certain to be delighted with! the quick relief It affords. For tale by A. P. BIGELOW, Cashier. R. A. MOTES, Aaot Chsb. J. anti-chi- ld WHY people up-to-d- ate - gro- THEATER tricken ; at your TB01US STUDIO. UTAHNA j la established cer's, it ia good hers. 3UC Guarantees good at any of our five offices. See samples at our entrance. 2457 fftthinglti lye. j erodit Center Open Till 6 p.m.; Sunday, 10 to 2. Lady attendant. John Hollis Bankhead, who ia expected to succeed the late Senator Morgan of Alabama, was born In Moscow, Ala., In 1842. He la and la a farmer. Hu served four years In the Confederate army, being wounded three times. He served in the Fiftieth Boise Capital News: The Japa now congress and in every successive one have another ground for grave griev- until March 4th last, when he 'retired, ance against the United States on the being defeated for by Capground that they have not been treated tain Richmond Pearson Hobson. In accordance with the "favored nation" clause of the treaties, and their T. P Gore, the blind nominee for jingo press and statesmen can get very senator from owes much of busy and the timid press and timid hfa success toOklahoma, Ilia wife. She reads toi statesmen of the United States may him the daily papers so that he may j prepare to do some more cringing. It keep informed as to current events; his appears that In the settlement with China following the Boxer troubles ot law books, so that he may remain a few years ago, the United States de- abreast with hla competitors In his pro- manded and received the promise of fession, and such volumes as the Con-- ! China to pay much more damage than gresslonal Record, so that he may ob-- 1 since has been found to be necessary, tain ammunition for use In his political campaigns. He la of pleasing appearand that, therefore, the United State ance and his afdlctlon la not obvious has algnlAed its intention of paying back some $50,000,000 of the over- to anyone who sees him from a short distance. charge. Aa the Japanese government will not be presented with a like Democrats of Oklahoma have broken amount. It certainly has just ground to the usual custom of the older comdo some more whining at the unjust monwealths and nominated a woman favoritism of thla country. for a state offlee. She' la Miss Kate Bernard, charity worker and teacher of Sacramento Bee: The Commoner chosen without opposition In very seldom makes such a mistake, but humanity, in a recent Issue It credited to Job th- the recent state primary for the offlee of commissioner of charities and corquotation, "I said In my haste, all men rection. Miss Bernard has been a resiare libra. The Commoner Is being dent of Oklahoma since the opening of kindly joshed all over the country for the territory in 1891. In 1902 she was not distinguishing between David, the official reporter for the territorial house harp player, and Job, the boll expert. of representatives, and in 1904 held the Line position in the territorial council or senate. It waa largely due to her: efforts that the tabor provision, compulsory education and the! establishment of a department of chart- ties and correction were incorporated In the constitution recently framed for the new state of Oklahoma. Buy Hardware from a druggist er grain and hay from a grocorT We specialise on Hay and Grain, and can aavo you money. If your 22 Provo; N. Main. No difference whst you pay you cannot get any better at any price. Bet of Teetb (best red rubber) . $7.00 Gold Fillings $1.00 and up A Good Set for... $.01 Silver and Amalgam Filling... .75 $3.50 to $5.00 s Bridge Work, beet Cement Filling Gold Crowds, 22k. Porcelain Fillings $2.50 to $5.00 $i.(, Twelve Years Protective Guarantee. Free examination and advice. Honest work) fair dealings make our oueeoso continuous. ns Tou should leceive your paper later than 8:15 p. in. If nut at tliat hour call Phone CSC and it will he sent you by special messenger. Pay No Money to Camera or other cellectora unless they present ereden-tial- s from the imdsreigned. Under no eircumstsncea will carriers ar eeliscters be allowed to take Stops. All notices of thia kind must be given to this office direct or by letter, er in parson, or phene SM, eno ring. JOURNAL PUBLISHING CO. By B. A. Bowman, 47 Teeth Extracted Without Pain. Free With Plate. DKJC FINE THING FOR Ogden, 2457 Wash. Logan, Lake. A PARTIAL LIST OP DISEASES CURED. Catarrh, Deafness. Ringing of the Head, Throat, Nose; Eye of the Lungs, Bronchial Tubao the Btomwh, Liver, Kidney TPo W0BMa- - SrSJ-JSUr-2??- out. la tha Ears, Disea or Ear. All Firmer and Cheat Dtaenn and Bladder. Hea Trouble, 8t Vitus Danes, PR Worm. Blood. Poteontng from aa AWT PRIVATE DISEASE O stay cured. Md adTte Can oc writs. Rmmbtrmlntlm may P- - ENTRANCE ROOJ1 19. . 1 Como at onoo. T 2468 Wash. Ave.. Boyle block. Of RETIETIBER THE NUMI |